Addressing low homeownership rates requires a multi-faceted approach that addresses the various barriers to homeownership such as affordability, access to credit, immigration status and linguistic isolation.

This Was L.A.’s City Hall for 39 Years | KCET

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This Was L.A.’s City Hall for 39 Years

Nathan Masters is host, producer, and managing editor of Lost LA, an original public television series from KCETLink and the USC Libraries. His writings focus on the evolution of Los Angeles' built and natural environments and have appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Magazine, The Public Historian, Boat, and other fine publications – including an essay in LAtitudes: An Angeleno's Atlas (Heyday, 2015).

Before Los Angeles’ municipal government moved into the imposing, neoclassical skyscraper we now know as City Hall in 1928, it was content with the more modest, three-story structure seen below. Located on the east side of Broadway between Second and Third streets, this older city hall — the third building to claim the title — was the pride of Los Angeles when it opened in 1889. Clad in red and brown brick with stone ornamentation, the Romanesque building announced itself from afar with its 150-foot campanile. Inside, modern conveniences like electric incandescent light bulbs mingled with more traditional refinements like Georgian marble and oak furniture.

The Los Angeles Times hailed the building — designed by local architect S. I. Haas — as “an honor to the commonwealth,” writing that it compared favorably with the civic structures of such peer cities as Albany, New York, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. But Los Angeles eventually outgrew its third city hall. Soon after the organs of government finished moving to their new headquarters in 1928, the city hired a contractor to demolish the old brick structure. A parking lot took its place.

This article first appeared on Los Angeles magazine's website on May 8, 2014.

A collaboration between the USC Libraries and KCETLink, Lost LA features the member collections of L.A. as Subject, a research alliance dedicated to preserving and telling the sometimes-hidden stories and histories of the Los Angeles region.

Nathan Masters is host, producer, and managing editor of Lost LA, an original public television series from KCETLink and the USC Libraries. His writings focus on the evolution of Los Angeles' built and natural environments and have appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Magazine, The Public Historian, Boat, and other fine publications – including an essay in LAtitudes: An Angeleno's Atlas (Heyday, 2015).

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